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Guysmiley
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Posted: Jul 23, 2006 - 01:01 AM
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Elite 1K

Joined: May 26, 2005 - 08:39 PM
Posts: 1496
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Build using a "3D printer process". Impressive technology.
http://www.newscientisttech.com/article ... news_rss20
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An unmanned aircraft made from "printed" parts rather than traditional machine-tooled components has been unveiled at the Farnborough Air Show, UK.
Developed at Lockheed Martin's top-secret "Skunk Works" research facility in Palmdale, California, US, the Polecat unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) is a 28-metre flying wing, weighing four tonnes. It was designed in part to test cheaper manufacturing technologies.
The Skunk Works is no stranger to advanced technology: its successful designs include the ultra-high-altitude U2 spyplane, the SR71 Blackbird - a spyplane which can travel at more than three times the speed of sound - and the radar-invisible F117 stealth fighter.
But speed and stealth performance are not everything: cost matters too. And since UAVs tend to crash more often than piloted planes, the race is on among UAV makers to make them cheaper. The Skunk Works thinks a technique called 3D rapid prototyping, or "3D printing", is the best way to lower costs.
In rapid prototyping, a three-dimensional design for a part - a wing strut, say - is fed from a computer-aided design (CAD) system to a microwave-oven-sized chamber dubbed a 3D printer. Inside the chamber, a computer steers two finely focussed, powerful laser beams at a polymer or metal powder, sintering it and fusing it layer by layer to form complex, solid 3D shapes.
The technique is widely used in industry to make prototype parts - to see if, for instance, they are the right shape and thickness for the job in hand. Now the strength of parts printed this way has improved so much that they can be used as working components.
About 90 per cent of Polecat is made of composite materials with much of that material made by rapid prototyping.
"The entire Polecat airframe was constructed using low-cost rapid prototyping materials and methods," says Frank Mauro, director of UAV systems at the Skunk Works.
"The big advantage over conventional, large-scale aircraft production programmes is the cost saving in tooling as well as the order-of-magnitude reductions in fabrication and assembly time."
By mixing composite polymers with radar-absorbing metals, it is thought that the aircraft can be built with a certain amount of stealth characteristics already built in.
The flexibility lent by 3D printing allowed Mauro's team to design and build the Polecat in only 18 months. "Today's sophisticated UAVs are approaching the cost of equivalent manned aircraft. Polecat's approach is a way to break this trend and demonstrate affordable UAV systems that can be rapidly developed," says Mauro.
The Polecat is also a test bed for autonomous guidance technology, which allows it to do everything from take-off to reconnaissance and landing without the remote guidance of a ground pilot.
This, Mauro hopes, should reduce the current high levels of UAV losses caused by heavy ground pilot workloads.
"This use of rapid prototyping is certainly a revolutionary approach to making an aircraft," says Bill Sweetman, aerospace and technology editor of Jane's International Defence Review. "The classic way is to set up a production line with very heavy-duty fixed metal tools that hold everything in the right place." That is too expensive an approach for the low production runs that reconnaissance UAVs are likely to need, he says
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Sponsor
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Posted: Jun 18, 2013 - 7:32 AM
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F-16.net Sponsor
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skrip00
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Posted: Jul 23, 2006 - 01:37 AM
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Forum Veteran

Joined: Jul 04, 2006 - 12:15 AM
Posts: 557
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| Wow... Stealth UCAV bomber already flying. What we don't know will always kick a$$. |
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RoAF
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Posted: Jul 23, 2006 - 10:28 AM
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Forum Veteran

Joined: Feb 15, 2006 - 10:45 PM
Posts: 632
Location: Romania
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snypa777
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Posted: Jul 23, 2006 - 06:47 PM
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Elite 1K

Joined: Jul 26, 2005 - 03:00 AM
Posts: 1527
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| Rapid prototyping has been around for quite a while...I saw a demo` 5 years ago and it was amazing to watch....although on a much smaller scale. |
_________________ "I may not agree with what you say....but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
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ATFS_Crash
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Posted: Nov 04, 2007 - 07:57 PM
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Forum Veteran

Joined: Dec 15, 2006 - 12:28 AM
Posts: 760
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Lockheed Martin has pulled the lid off of a secret, stealthy, high-flying drone. Built and flown by its famous "Skunk Works" division, the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) could serve as a model for a new generation of robotic aircraft that hits targets halfway around the world.
With a 90-foot wingspan and a tailless design, the "Polecat" UAV looks like a smaller version of the B-2 stealth bomber. And like the B-2, the drone has been built to be stealthy and sneaky. But the twin-engine Polecat is "90 percent composite materials, rather than metal," the L.A. Daily News notes. "The vehicle is also made from less than 200 parts," adds Aviation Week. "Adhesives are used rather than rivets, decreasing the amount of labor needed to construct it -- that approach also contributed to a lower radar cross section inherent in the design.
Polecat UAV
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bsowPKvcIxo |
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huggy
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Posted: Nov 04, 2007 - 08:17 PM
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Joined: Jan 27, 2004 - 07:39 AM
Posts: 351
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| In case anyone didn't know this, the Polecat was destroyed in a crash earlier this year. |
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snypa777
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Posted: Nov 04, 2007 - 10:21 PM
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Joined: Jul 26, 2005 - 03:00 AM
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huggy wrote:
In case anyone didn't know this, the Polecat was destroyed in a crash earlier this year.
Ya see, taking the guy out of the loop is a bad thing! Who aspires to join the Airforce, any airforce, to sit in a bunker and "monitor" a UAV.....
Before anybody says it, I know any aircraft can crash but the bloke inside, or woman, provides extra dimensions machines will never have. |
_________________ "I may not agree with what you say....but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
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sferrin
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Posted: Nov 10, 2007 - 11:16 PM
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Elite 1K

Joined: Jul 22, 2005 - 04:23 AM
Posts: 1615
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snypa777 wrote:
huggy wrote:
In case anyone didn't know this, the Polecat was destroyed in a crash earlier this year.
Ya see, taking the guy out of the loop is a bad thing! Who aspires to join the Airforce, any airforce, to sit in a bunker and "monitor" a UAV.....
Before anybody says it, I know any aircraft can crash but the bloke inside, or woman, provides extra dimensions machines will never have.
Like a splatter pattern when it piles in?  |
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snypa777
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Posted: Nov 11, 2007 - 04:32 AM
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Elite 1K

Joined: Jul 26, 2005 - 03:00 AM
Posts: 1527
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sferrin wrote:
snypa777 wrote:
huggy wrote:
In case anyone didn't know this, the Polecat was destroyed in a crash earlier this year.
Ya see, taking the guy out of the loop is a bad thing! Who aspires to join the Airforce, any airforce, to sit in a bunker and "monitor" a UAV.....
Before anybody says it, I know any aircraft can crash but the bloke inside, or woman, provides extra dimensions machines will never have.
Like a splatter pattern when it piles in?
Well, there IS that!  |
_________________ "I may not agree with what you say....but I will defend to the death your right to say it".
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